Malone's Church-Ties that Bind-Madison, MD
Posted by: Don.Morfe
N 38° 29.502 W 076° 13.014
18S E 393874 N 4261073
Harriet Tubman was born nearby on Harrisville Road at the Anthony Thompson plantation around 1822, where Thompson enslaved her father, Ben Ross, and about 40 other people.
Waymark Code: WM11W7J
Location: Maryland, United States
Date Posted: 12/27/2019
Views: 4
Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Byway-Harriet Tubman was born nearby on Harrisville Road at the Anthony Thompson plantation around 1822, where Thompson enslaved her father, Ben Ross, and about 40 other people. While Tubman’s roots began near here, she moved to Bucktown during her early childhood and returned to the area as a teen. In this place, she felt the nurturing bonds of family, faith and community.
Hired to the Stewart family, Tubman began working with her father in these woods, cutting timber and floating it along Stewart’s Canal to Parson’s Creek and Madison. Tubman’s brothers worked here too. Free black laborers timbered and farmed this land also, establishing a blended community of enslaved and free black families. According to local tradition, this is where Harriet met her free husband, John Tubman.
Following the Civil War, this African-American community established Malone’s Methodist Episcopal Church, named after Jeremiah Malone who deeded the property in 1864, formalizing community and faith ties that existed long before.
(Inscription under the photo at the top)
Mark Priest, Timber Crew, 2007, Acrylic on Canvas 56” x 77”
Address: 4573 White Marsh Road Madison, MD USA 21648
Open to the public?: Public
Name of organization who placed the marker: Harriet Tubman Underground Railroad Byway
Web site: Not listed
Site Details: Not listed
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